History of Sex in Cinema:The Greatest and Most Influential
Sexual Films and Scenes(Illustrated)

Feature: Porn Chic of the 1970s

The History of Sex in Cinema

Porn Chic of the 1970s:

There were a few films in the
1970s that attempted to capture the newly-found mainstream hard-core
porn business, particularly after the remarkable success of Deep
Throat (1972).

Title Screens

Movie Title/Year and Film/Scene Description

Screenshots

Boys in the Sand (1971)

Writer/director Wakefield Poole's film was a landmark
in cinematic history - it was the first - and maybe only - gay
hard-core feature film to have had any mainstream success - and
it preceded Deep Throat (1972) by almost a year. It was
one of the milestone examples of the era's "porno chic" in
its heralding of gay male sexuality.

[Note: The film's title was
a take-off on director William Friedkin's gay-themed film The
Boys in the Band (1970).]

Reportedly, it was the first triple-X film of any orientation
to bill its director and actors, and to date, the only adult film
ever reviewed in The New York Times. Unlike the prevailing
stereotypes of gays, this film portrayed the lead male character
as well-adjusted, athletic, and toned.

The low-budget film (made for $8,000) was composed
of three segments, all set on secluded Fire Island, in the life of
a blonde gay man named Donovan (Casey Donovan) at a beachside resort.
Sex scenes were filmed at the pool, at the beach, and indoors. It
was replete with many instances of gay oral sex, inter-racial gay
sex, gay intercourse, and use of sex toys.

Gay Sex at the Pool

Behind the Green Door (1972)

The Mitchell Brothers' (Artie and Jim) X-rated film
was the first hard-core pornographic movie widely released in the
United States (just before Deep Throat (1972)), and very
popular with mixed-sex audiences. It was made on a budget of $60,000,
and earned over $1 million in theatrical releases, and $25 million
from its video release.

It starred young Marilyn Chambers, the "99.44%
pure Ivory Snow girl" on the detergent box, as abducted young
woman Gloria Saunders. After being kidnapped, she was given a relaxing
body massage by a female:

The sensation that you've been feeling through the
rest of your body traveled, and now enveloped you entirely. Your
breasts will begin to feel warm and your nipples tingle with anticipation.
Feel the nipples grow erect. And the pleasure that you feel from
them will go to your very depths and consume you.

Then, she was taken to a mysterious, underground sex
show club called the Green Door, led in by six black-garbed priestesses.
Her arms and legs were held spread out, and she was caressed, laid
down and readied for sex with oral stimulation.

Gloria Saunders (Marilyn Chambers)
Prepped by Six
Priestesses

There in a live sex act on stage
for the wealthy masked patrons' entertainment (who were engaged in
wild self-gratification) in the audience, she had an inter-racial
sex scene (scandalous for the time) with an African Stud (Johnnie
Keyes), who pleasured her with cunnilingus before having intercourse.

This was followed by a trapeze swing act with
four sexual acrobats who were serviced by Gloria, from behind and in
front, and to each side. She took the multiple partners at the
same time (with her hands, her mouth, and her vagina). And then there
was a lengthy orgy sequence with many participating.

As the film was concluding, it featured a highly-unusual,
seven minute special-effects sequence - a very artsy, spectacular,
psychedelic, rainbow-colored, slow-motion, optically printed and
solarized montage of male sexual climax on Gloria's face (almost
in clinical detail) by one of the well-endowed trapeze artists.

This cheaply-made, raw, hard-core porn flick (a gross
sex comedy, actually) by Gerard Damiano became the most profitable
film of its kind of all-time, grossing over $600 million, although
it was ruled obscene and banned in New York City. It
brought adult movies into the popular culture.

It soon became a 'porno-chic'
film and cultural phenomenon (the first cross-over porn film that became
a hit). This profoundly-influential and ground-breaking film lured
thousands of middle-class audiences into adult theatres for the first
time as a date movie. Its tagline was enticing:

"HOW FAR DOES
A GIRL HAVE TO GO TO UNTANGLE HER TINGLE?"

After
its initial period of release (at a time of sexual revolution), it
became a cultural phenomenon and it was fashionable to talk about
the film (and its educationally feminist theme of female sexual gratification)
or make references to it (such as Watergate's 'Deep Throat' whistleblower).

The thin, simplistic plot filmed like a stag flick
in only six days, was about a young woman Linda Lovelace (as Herself)
who couldn't experience an orgasm until her doctor, Dr. Young (Harry
Reems) examined her and discovered her strange anatomical defect:

Doctor: "Oh, that's amazing...It's truly amazing.
Miss Lovelace, you don't have one."
Linda: "You cluck. I'm a woman. I'm not supposed to have one."
Doctor: "No, I don't mean one of those. I mean, well you, you don't have
a clitoris. There's no clitoris here."
Linda: "Are you sure?"
Doctor: "Of course I'm sure. Here, take a look."
Linda: "Well, I'll be damned."
Doctor: "Hmm, no wonder you hear no bells. You have no tinkler."
Linda: "That's, that's not funny."
Doctor: "Oh, now, now, Miss Lovelace, please. Try to, try to compose
yourself, really. Tell me something. When you get laid, that is, when
you have sexual intercourse, uh, what excites you the most?"

He learned that during the performance of fellatio,
she was the most stimulated, because her clitoris was deep down
in the bottom of her throat.

There were a number of follow-up films to Deep
Throat (1972), including Deep Throat Part II (1974) (see
below), the hardcore French Deep Throat (1977, Fr.) with only
Harry Reems reprising his role, and a recent remake titled Lovelace
(2013) (see
later). It portrayed the
dual perspectives that adult star and sexual freedom icon Linda
Lovelace (played by 27 year old Amanda Seyfried) (later known as
Linda Marchiano) brought to the film. Depending on the time period
of her life, she either embraced the porn film - or rallied against
it and became an activist leader in the anti-pornography movement.

Another similarly-titled film was director
Fenton Bailey's Inside Deep Throat (2005),an NC-17-rated (later
R) documentary about the porn revolution of the 1970s spurred by
the 1972 landmark film. It examined the film's production
history and impact on American culture, including interviews with
both the director and male star Harry Reems.

Miss Linda Lovelace
(Herself)

Devil in
Miss Jones (1973)

After Deep Throat (1972), writer/director Gerard
Damiano's next film was one of the most successful porn films of
all-time.

The erotic X-rated masterpiece starred
Georgina Spelvin as Justine Jones, a lonely, virginal and repressed
spinster in her early 30s, who had committed suicide (her sole sin)
by slitting her wrists with a razor-blade in her bathtub.

Unqualified to enter Heaven, she decided to
enjoy sexual sins on Earth to justify her damnation. She bargained
with the Devil to live her life over on Earth, consumed by Lust.
She promised:

"I would live a life filled, engulfed, consumed by
lust."

She was given the opportunity to 'earn' her place in
Hell by becoming the embodiment of Lust when she returned to Earth. An
immortal known only as The Teacher (Harry Reems) used his supernatural
abilities to erase all of Justine's sexual inhibitions.

The
film contained many graphic sexual acts and erotic encounters, including
straight sex, lesbian, anal, group sex (threesome), masturbation (in
the bathtub with a small water hose), a slithering snake, use of
an anal butt-plug, the insertion of grapes into one's vagina, and
more.

After becoming sex-addicted,
she found herself imprisoned for eternity with an impotent
and uninterested man.

Justine Jones
(Georgina Spelvin)

Deep Throat Part II (1974)

Director Joseph Sarno's
low-budget, R-rated sequel was a
blatant, inferior cash grab attempt. The US version was entirely bowdlerized
and sex-free and played like a typical mainstream sex comedy, while
the Italian DVD release version exhibited the film's original soft-core
sex scenes.

It again featured Linda Lovelace (in
her second feature film) as Nurse Lovelace who worked for a goofy sex
doctor named Dr. Jayson (Harry Reems). She was drafted by the American
government (CIA) to help spy on the Soviets.

Her objective was to become
romantically involved with one of the patients -- nerdy computer programmer
Dilbert Lamb (Levi Richards), who suffered from incestuous neuroses
regarding his lascivious gray-haired Aunt Juliet (Tina Russell). She
and others (the KGB) attempted to destroy Dilbert's powerful computer
creation named "Oscar" -
a sentient computer database that was threatening individual rights
of confidentiality and privacy, by storing lots of personal data and
confidential information.

[Note: There were other unrelated X-rated sequel-versions
of the original 1972 film, all direct-to-video, including:

Pioneering porn director Radley
Metzger's witty, well-acted sexploitation comedy film (similar
in part to Who's
Afraid of Virginia Woolf?)
was adapted from the off-Broadway stage play that ran for less
than a month in late 1971. It was filmed in 1972, but not released
in the US until 1974.

Released in two versions, the
longer hard-core version was 91 minutes, while the soft-core version
was only 84 minutes. The film was one of the
first feature-length porn films about bisexual swinging, with the
tagline:

"...Experience
the Possibilities."

According to
the narrator's voice-over, the action was set in a seaside villa
in a fictional European village: "In
the village of Leisure, in the land of Play, deep within the erogenous
zone." Part of the sex included taking drugs and dressing up
in costumes: a sailor outfit, a negligee, a nun's habit, and a cowboy
costume.

The sex farce told about a liberated and hedonistic
married couple who enjoyed the swinger lifestyle:

Jack (Gerald Grant), a fashion
photographer

Elvira (Claire Wilbur), predatory

The couple convinced other inexperienced newlyweds
to join them for an evening of experimentation
with bi-sexuality and group sex:

Betsy (Lynn Lowry), naive

Eddie
(Calvin Culver), Betsy's uptight husband

The pairings of the couples also
included same-sex action (cross-cutting between upstairs with the
females Elvira/Betsy and downstairs with the males Jack/Eddie), with
their wager about who would be the first to seduce a same-sex member.

The FoursomeBetsy
(Lynn Lowry) Elvira
(Claire Wilbur)

The Autobiography of a Flea
(1976)

This pornographic film was a groundbreaking, landmark
film from the Mitchell Brothers Film Group - it was noted as being
the first major X-rated porn film directed by a female,
Sharon McNight.

It was a costume drama loosely adapted from the 19th
century erotic novel published in London, and set at the turn
of the century - a Fanny
Hill-style, Victorian period comedy of love and lust.

The film was uniquely told from the perspective of
a flea (the Narrator, Warren Pierce) in the private place (pubic
hair) of a beautiful young 14 year-old woman named Belle (Jean Jennings).

She was controlled by her uncle, seduced by the local and lustful
Roman Catholic priest Father Ambrose (Paul Thomas), and introduced
to a world of sexual depravity.

Belle
(Jean Jennings)

The Opening of Misty Beethoven
(1977)

Radley Metzger's (pseudonymed as Henry Paris) film was
a hard-core pornographic version of the George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion story,
and has been
widely acknowledged as one of the best porn
films ever made. With high production values, an elaborate plot, and
a big budget, it was filmed in various international locations.

It
was also the first widely-released porn film to explicitly display a
taboo sexual practice known as pegging (female-to-male strap-on intercourse)
during a menage a trois scene.

Constance
Money/Susan Jensen starred as the title character Dolores 'Misty' Beethoven.
She was a crass prostitute who was discovered in a seedy Paris theatre
giving an old man (in a Napolen costume) a handjob, by conceited
sexologist author Dr. Seymour Love (Jamie Gillis).

Dr. Love bet his wealthy patron Geraldine Rich (Jacqueline
Beudant) that he could help advance her into being the hottest girl
in town (the next revered Golden Rod Girl, the top honor of Europe's
sex-society), by tutoring her (a la Svengali Professor Henry Higgins)
to become sexually-accomplished.
He would show her off at the annual ball hosted
by vain, Hugh Hefner-like porn magnate-publisher of Golden Rod Magazine,
Lawrence Layman (Ras Kean) and his randy wife Barbara (Gloria Leonard).

The action shifted from Paris to Love's penthouse apartment
in New York (and then back to Europe to Geraldine's lavish estate filled
with butlers and maids), where 'Misty' had been propositioned and challenged
to the training in the ways of pleasure. Misty endured a variety of
strict but sexy practice regimens, with films, demos, and interactions
with the servants, while Dr. Love looked on critically.

Along the way, one of Misty's feats was to seduce an
obviously gay art dealer (Casey Donovan) in an opera house bathroom
(to the tune of the William Tell Overture). She was recognized
as accomplished by seducing an impotent man, pleasuring three male servants
simultaneously, and by being vetted at Layman's annual ball. There
during threeway sex, she seduced Lawrence (making love to Barbara)
with female-on-male strap-on sex from behind.

Misty's (Constance Money) Menage a Trois Threeway
Scene

By film's end, an in-control Misty had reversed the arrangement
she had previously experienced with Dr. Love - with whom she had fallen
in love. After she returned to him (he had morosely waited for her
return), she was now in charge of his sex school.
Dr. Love was seated below her, subserviently wearing bondage gear in
the film's final image.

'Misty' Beethoven
(Constance Money)

Candy Stripers (1978)

Director Bob Chinn's adult comedy used the setting of
a hospital and its naughty candy-striping volunteers to tell its porn-related
story. The 1978 film's notorious 'fisting' scenes were excised from
all the original prints. Its tagline was:

"Guaranteed to Make Your Temperature Rise."

There were many sequels to follow:

Candy Stripers Part II (1985)

Candy Stripers 3 (1987)

Candy Stripers 4 (1990)

Candy Stripers 5: The New Generation (1999)

The original film told about three sex-eager, apprentice/volunteer
candy stripers in the workplace:

Cindy (Chris Cassidy/Montana)

Pam (Amber Hunt)

Sharon (Nancy Hoffman)

The first scene found Cindy having sex with George (Joey
Silvera), making her late to work and having to take an ambulance (during
the opening credits). On her last day of work, the very horny Sharon
was caught providing sex to one of the doctors, Dr. Bishop (Richard
Pacheco) in a janitor's closet. Pam also assisted her aroused patient
Tom Marshall (Rock Steadie) with sex. And at the nurse's station, Sharon
also had oral sex with two co-nurses: Nurse Allen (Lauren Black) and
Nurse Reynolds (Mimi Morgan).

After more instances of sex between female staff members
and patients, Sharon ultimately also pleasured her overbearing
and 'prudish' boss Sarge (Sharon Thorpe) at her own illegal, late-night
going-away or farewell sex-orgy party in the operating theatre.

Debbie Does Dallas (1978)

One of the most successful and best-known of the 70's
era of porn was this film, from director Jim Clark. The
best-selling film, reportedly one of the top 5 highest-grossing porn
films of all-time, was released as one of the earliest VHS videotapes.

It was also noted for its numerous shower scenes and
the climactic scene with 'girl-next-door' Debbie in her cheerleading
outfit having sex with her employer. It was notorious for being denounced
and sued by the real Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders (Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders,
Inc. vs. Pussycat Cinema, Ltd., and Michael Zaffarano (the film's financier),
settled in late 1979) - which produced great publicity for the film.
As its major marketing strategy, the marquee advertised that the film's
star was an "Ex Dallas Cowgirl Cheerleader."

The film's plot was about wholesome blonde MHS student
Debbie Benton (Bambi Woods, a made-up name) who had won a spot on pro
football's Texas Cowgirls cheerleading squad. A number of her cheerleader
girlfriends met in the shower and locker room, where Debbie offered
ways to acquire jobs and help her raise the funds in only two weeks.

Rikki O'Neal (Sherri Tart), car-wash girl

Annie (Jenny Cole), car-wash girl

Lisa (Georgette Sanders), brunette

Roberta (Misty Winter, aka Christie Ford), red-haired

Tammy (Arcadia Lake), brunette

Pat (Kasey Rodgers), red-haired

Donna (Merril Townsend, aka Merle Michaels), blonde

Eventually, they decided the most advantageous method
was to call themselves Team Services and charge for
sexual activities. Debbie told her friends: "Listen girls, there's
money to be had, and fast money. And you don't have to do anything more
than what we do with our boyfriends. And they certainly have fun, don't
they? And we're all still virgins, aren't we?" Rikki and Annie,
after washing a car in sopping wet T-shirts, decided to strip down
for Mr. Bradly (David Pierce) for more lucrative earnings. In another
subplot, Mrs. Hardwick (Robin Byrd), wife of her husband (Eric Edwards)
who owned a candle shop, caught Roberta using a candle as
a dildo to pleasure herself, thereafter followed by a seductive threesome
with her husband.

Debbie's sexual association with
her own lecherous sports store boss, Mr. Greenfeld (credited as Richard
Balla, actually Robert Kerman) proved very profitable also. After
hours in the store and dressed in her cheerleader's outfit
(a costume that mimicked the Dallas Cowboy Cheerleaders team, the cause
of the lawsuit), Debbie laid back and mentioned to him: "My,
Mr. Greenfeld, how big you are?" He replied: "I always dreamed
of being a quarterback, and making love to the captain of the cheerleaders." He
untied her blouse, revealing her breasts that he touched and kissed -
for a fee. He progressively
helped to raise the needed money, and then he offered to pay all of their
expenses if she scored a sexual "touchdown" with
him. In the film's conclusion after a bigger payout for the cheerleaders'
trip, he
chased her around in a football uniform before they had sex together
in a variety of poses.

Director Chuck Vincent's film, similar to an X-rated Sex
and the City many years previous to the popular cable-TV show,
was one of the last major attempts to create a pornographic cross-over
mainstream film for viewing couples in the neighborhood theatre.

Originally X-rated, it was re-cut and released in mainstream
theatres across the country with an R-rating, and was billed as "the
perfect film for couples."

The remarkable, cross-over hard-core film told a story
about three career-oriented women, all haunted by abusive relationships,
who shared rooms in a high-rise apartment in NYC. Each of them became
engaged in various degrading or challenging couplings with misogynistic
men, while attempting to be supportive of each other:

Joan (Veronica Hart), an aspiring small-town
actress who wished to succeed on Broadway, was engaged in an illicit
affair with predatory married drama coach Ken (Frank Adams/Phil
Smith); she was also attracted to gay fellow actor co-star Eddie
Shriner (Jerry Butler)

Sherry Collins (Kelly Nichols), an LA model with
a cocaine habit, was gang-raped, reverted to her old ways, and
became intimately involved with perverted and sadistic manager
Joel (Jamie Gillis) who nearly murdered her

Billie Donnell (Samantha Fox), a dark-haired ex-prostitute
(her ex-madam Marlene was portrayed by porn actress Gloria Leonard)
was a production assistant (casting director) for TV commercials,
who was still being abused by former crude pimp
Marv Lester (Bobby Astyr); she was in love with two-timing Jim
(Jack Wrangler) (who was secretly planning to marry someone else),
but also turned tricks with Dick (Ron Jeremy)

The film ended with two of the roommates leaving Billie,
who was then forced to seek two other tenants. Joan had
left to begin touring in summer stock, and Sherry returned to LA
to live with her mother.